Anonymous, you are powerful beyond imagination. The things that you have accomplished have been fucking biblical; your potential out of this world. From shutting down a nation, to offending the passerby, you's are the shit. Leaderless, you are powerful, organised, however, you are mighty. With some organisation hacktivism can take another step forward in history, becoming the new type of Revolution. The Bolshevik Revolution Oct 1917, the Easter Uprising in Ireland, all had an organisational nucleus. Anonymous, become an organised, 'single class' group of hackers and protesters and you will be a force to be reckoned with, for the good of mankind. Making collective decisions on where to strike next, bringing up points to what should be looked at. Equally voting on what protest should happen. Become the group you were meant to be, organise and reach your potential.

>>648328444Organization is key for power, not being organizated is key for durability. When you do this kind of thing, people get caught very often because of illegal things, and a non organizated team can keep up when someone is arrested, but a organized cannot if the leader is arrested. Only if someone take years wiping his entire history in the internet and older logins/mentions it would be useful, but it is not impossible.

>>648330918The beauty of this 'single class' organisation is that there are no major figures - just equals. In terms of organisation, the vision I have is one of bringing up a problem or plan on a relatively large, yet unmoderated - to an extent - social median (i.e. 4chan), putting it to the poles, and seeing if the issue, which has been brought to the majorities attention, is worth taking action on.

A simple polling system, that is all, for now. The one problem is promoting this polling system to reach places where hackivists and activists alike are plenty, where a poll will draw their attention, and they will vote. Maybe even somewhere in the deep web. We need to think about it, through and through, first.